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Old January 24th 09, 04:22 PM posted to rec.aviation.ifr
nick name
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Posts: 6
Default trivial pursuit: international terminal forecast (TAF)

On Jan 23, 4:08*pm, Scott Skylane wrote:
nick name wrote:
Canceling a flight because of weather can lead to some unusual
pursuits. While getting a weather briefing, I came across the
following snippet which is part of the Fallon (NAS) TAF:


KNFL 2312/2409 VRB06KT 4800 BR VCSH SCT009 SCT060 OVC080 650809 651703
QNH3003INS


Now I must confess that I had a decoded version. Still I was a bit
surprised that "4800" refers to visibility in meters (I knew this but
forgot it). What was even more surprising was the decoding of "650809
651703". I could see no correlation whatsoever. After a brief but
fruitless web search for an explanation (this is *not* a NWS encoding)
I decided to look at "official" FAA guides. This led me to a dead end
with the latest version of AC-0045F, the FAA weather bible.


So, my main question is: where is the FAA sanctioned decoding
algorithm? Or do military/international forecasts not count as a part
of weather briefings? I *was* able to find a document that explained
the above code. It is anything but simple. For those that like a
challenge, decode the above 2 numbers. Answers will appear in next
week's column.


Shorthand for civil twilight, or thereabouts?

Happy Flying!
Scott Skylane


Hint: 650809 651703
is decoded as:
Icing: Moderate icing in cloud expected at 17000 feet (5181m) AGL
extending to 20000 feet (6096m) AGL
Icing: Moderate icing in cloud expected at 8000 feet (2438m) AGL
extending to 17000 feet (5181m) AGL